Transcript Rock salt

Extracting salts
Aseel Samaro
Extracting salts
Introduction
 Salt has always been valuable to flavour and preserve food.
 The chemical name for salt is sodium chloride.
 We can make chlorine from salt.
 Chlorine is used to make drinking water safe by killing harmful
bacteria.
Sea salt
 People have obtained salt from  seawater and salt
lakes for thousands of years.
 As the water evaporated, salt (sodium chloride) crystals
were left behind.
 This method is still used in some countries, such as
Australia and India.
 If the seawater is taken from an area that is not
polluted, the crystals of sea salt are pure enough to use
in cooking.
Salt crystals
India is the world’s third largest salt producer, after
China and the USA.
Give two uses for salt.
flavour food
preserve food
make chlorine
Name one chemical that is made from salt and explain how it is used.
chlorine; it kills bacteria in drinking water
How did the Romans obtain salt in Britain?
They trapped sea water in shallow ponds and waited for it to evaporate
Why do you think the evaporation method of extracting salt is still used in
Australia but not in Britain?
Climate not hot enough/not enough sunshine/too much rain in Britain.
Rock salt
 In winter you often see lorries spreading salt and grit on the roads.
 The salt makes the ice melt and the roads are made safer.
 This kind of salt is called rock salt.
 The rock salt is mined from the ground and broken into a powder,
which makes it easier to spread on icy roads.
 Rock salt is not pure salt.
 It is a natural mixture of salt and insoluble materials like clay.
 Most rock salt is brown, but it can be yellow or red depending on the
clay it is mixed with.
 You can purify rock salt yourself.
 Because the salt is soluble but the sand is not, water can be used to
help separate the substances.
 The insoluble materials can be filtered off using a funnel and filter
paper, and the remaining solution evaporated to obtain the salt.
Give two reasons why rock salt and grit are used on icy roads and
pavements.
makes ice melt
provides grip/friction/stops slipping
What gives rock salt its colour?
clay
What is meant by an ‘insoluble material’?
does not dissolve/not soluble
Describe how you would separate pure salt from rock salt.
crush, dissolve, filter, evaporate
Mining salt
 In Cheshire, people have obtained salt from brine pits since the 17th century. Brine is
salty water.
 Because salt is soluble in water but rocks are not, water is used to mine the salt. This is
called solution mining.
 Water is pumped down one of the pipes to dissolve some of the salt underground.
 The brine is then pumped up and water is evaporated to leave pure, white salt crystals.
 However, removing the salt from under the ground leaves large holes.
 The land above can sink into these holes, destroying buildings.
Using solution mining to extract salt
Did you know ?
 The concentration of salt in the Dead Sea, between Jordan and
Palestine , is so high that you can float very easily on the water
surface.
 However, only specially adapted microorganisms can survive in it.
HOMEWORK